The beloved executive, who has discovered hits for the likes of Kanye West, Jay-Z, Diddy and Drake.
The impending EMI-Sony/ATV merger may have seen its first casualty of sorts. “Big” Jon Platt, president of EMI Music Publishing, is leaving the company after 17 years, a source close to the situation tells The Hollywood Reporter.
According to Billboard.biz,
Platt made the announcement to his staff on Tuesday afternoon. His last
day will be Friday, when EMI Publishing will be handed the ASCAP Rhythm
& Soul Award for Publisher of the Year for the 18th year in a row.
Over the years, Platt has signed Kanye West, Jay-Z, Diddy, Beyonce, Drake, Usher, Ludacris
and many others to the company. He is described by those who work under
him as “beloved” and “adored” -- two traits that were evident during
Platt’s annual (for the most part) confab of EMI’s songwriters at
Beverly Hills’ SLS Hotel in April.
Out of the same conference a few years earlier emerged the hit collaboration “Empire State of Mind” by Jay-Z (a longtime pal of Platt’s) and Alicia Keys, written by EMI’s Angela Hunte and J’net Sewell.
This year’s event, combining urban, pop and country writers, drew over
200 participants from EMI’s roster, as well as every major label and
several high-profile imprints, including Rostrum Records (home to Wiz Khalifa and Mac Miller) and Syco (Simon Cowell's label for artists disovered via TV properties like X Factor and Got Talent).
Speaking to THR on April 16, Platt said, "Great things can happen
when you put that many creative people together in a room. They talk a
language we don't talk." Addressing his own staff that day, he reminded
the dozen EMI Publishing executives assembled that, "At one point, every
superstar artist was a new artist that A&R was trying to get people
to believe in."
The news comes after months of speculation as to whether Platt would join his former boss Martin Bandier at Sony/ATV when the publishing giant, along with a consortium of investors (including the estate of Michael Jackson and industry veteran David Geffen),
merges with EMI (pending regulatory approval; EMI's recorded units will
be split off and sold to Universal), but one source hints that Platt
has already been there, done that.
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